Run on sentence

Liz H.C1Kwiziq Q&A regular contributor

Run on sentence

Bonjour Cécile. A few weeks ago I said I’d find an example of a run on sentence. In this lesson, I had one: Je ne peux pas parler maintenant, je suis en train de travailler. In English, we’d separate the two independent clauses with a semi-colon or a period, not a comma. I’m asking if it’s standard in French to use a comma to separate two clauses? Merci pour votre réponse ! 

Asked 5 years ago
CécileNative French expert teacher in KwiziqCorrect answer

Thanks for getting back to me on this Liz!

In French, to my knowledge, you would only use a comma as the two clauses have a strong link. Here are some examples where you would use a semi-colon ( point-virgule) in French):

La planète se réchauffe; les glaciers reculent d’années en années. 

L’objet de la guerre, c’est la victoire; celui de la victoire, la conquête; celui de la conquête, la conservation. (quote from Montesquieu - source- Le Petit Grevisse)

Hope this helps but I am not a ponctuation expert!

Run on sentence

Bonjour Cécile. A few weeks ago I said I’d find an example of a run on sentence. In this lesson, I had one: Je ne peux pas parler maintenant, je suis en train de travailler. In English, we’d separate the two independent clauses with a semi-colon or a period, not a comma. I’m asking if it’s standard in French to use a comma to separate two clauses? Merci pour votre réponse ! 

Sign in to submit your answer

Don't have an account yet? Join today

Ask a question

Find your French level for FREE

Test your French to the CEFR standard

Find your French level
Getting that for you now...